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Problematic technology use during adolescence: why don’t teenagers seek treatment?
In recent issues of Education and Health, I have briefly reviewed the empirical evidence relating to problematic use of technology by adolescents including online video gaming (Griffiths, 2014), social networking (Griffiths, 2013a; Kuss & Griffiths, 2011), and mobile phone use (Griffiths, 2013b). Most of the research studies that have examined ‘technological addictions’ during adolescence have indicated that a small but significant minority experience severe problems resulting in detriments to education, physical fitness, psychological wellbeing, and family and personal relationships (Griffiths, 2010; Kuss, Griffiths, Karila & Billieux, 2014). Given these findings, why is it that so few teenagers seek treatment? This article briefly outlines a number of reasons why this might be the case by examining other literature on adolescent drug use and adolescent gambling (e.g., Chevalier & Griffiths, 2005; 2005; Griffiths, 2001). Three different types of explanation are discussed: (i) treatment-specific explanations, (ii) research-related explanations, and (iii) developmental and peer group explanations
Griffiths, O V, NX4513
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/389184Surname: GRIFFITHS. Given Name(s) or Initials: O V. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: NX4513. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 37206.212931
Item: [2016.0049.21477] "Griffiths, O V, NX4513
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Gaming addiction in adolescence (revisited)
Gaming addiction has become a topic of increasing research interest. Over the last 25 years, I have written many articles on adolescent video gaming for Education and Health as it is one of the research fields that is constantly evolving. In fact, over the last decade, there has been a significant increase in the number of scientific studies examining various aspects of online addiction particularly among adolescents and young adults (Kuss & Griffiths, 2012; Kuss, Griffiths, Karila & Billieux, 2014). Although the amount and the quality of research in the field has progressed much over this period, it is still in its infancy compared to other more established behavioural addictions (such as pathological gambling). This article briefly examines (i) how adolescent gaming addiction research has changed over the last three decades, (ii) how online gaming addiction has gained genuine psychiatric status, (iii) excessive gaming as an addiction, and (iv) where the gaming addiction field is going
The developmental profile in children with autism spectrum disorder: analysis of selected clinical cases using the Griffiths III scales
openIl mio progetto per questo elaborato consiste nell’analisi qualitativa dei profili di sviluppo ottenuti dalla somministrazione delle scale Griffiths III a soggetti con disturbo dello spettro autistico.
Le scale Griffiths III (Green et al., 2016) sono uno strumento utilizzato nella pratica clinica per valutare lo sviluppo del bambino dagli 0 ai 6 anni di età; sono composte da 5 scale, ognuna rappresentante un ambito dello sviluppo del bambino. Le scale Griffiths III rappresentano un gold standard nella valutazione dello sviluppo dei bambini di età prescolare.
Il disturbo dello spettro autistico è un disturbo del neurosviluppo caratterizzato da deficit persistenti nella comunicazione sociale, nell’interazione sociale e pattern di comportamento e interessi o attività ristretti e ripetitivi (American Psychiatric Association, 2014). In Italia si stima una prevalenza di 1 bambino con disturbo dello spettro autistico ogni 77 (Scattoni et al., 2023).
Il mio studio nasce dalla volontà di osservare nella mia pratica clinica di terapista della neuro e psicomotricità dell’età evolutiva le conclusioni e i risultati ottenuti dallo studio pubblicato nel 2023 dal titolo “Developmental profiles of young children with autism spectrum disorder and global developmental delay: A study with the Griffiths III scales” (Taddei et al., 2023). L’articolo ipotizza l’esistenza di un profilo di sviluppo tipico che caratterizza i bambini con disturbo dello spettro autistico: questo risulta essere disomogeneo con maggiori deficit nell’area del linguaggio e della comunicazione e nell’area personale-socio-emotiva rispetto alle restanti aree dello sviluppo.
Il progetto è stato condotto presso il centro di riabilitazione neuropsichiatrica e di psicoterapia dell'età evolutiva Dosso Verde di Pavia per gentile concessione del direttore sanitario, del legale rappresentante e in collaborazione con i neuropsichiatri infantili dell’istituto.
Sono stati presi in analisi i profili di sviluppo di 10 pazienti con disturbo dello spettro autistico, di cui 7 maschi e 3 femmine, di età compresa fra i 18 e i 48 mesi
Quantum Griffiths Inequalities
We present a general framework of Griffiths inequalities for quantum systems. Our approach is based on operator inequalities associated with self-dual cones and provides a consistent viewpoint of the Griffiths inequality. As examples, we discuss the quantum Ising model, quantum rotor model, Bose-Hubbard model, and Hubbard model. We present a model-independent structure that governs the correlation inequalities
Conulinus randalanai Griffiths & Herbert 2013, sp. n.
Conulinus randalanai sp. n. Fig. 10 Etymology: Named for Roger Randalana, on-site manager of the Tsingy Beanka reserve and participant in many malacological expeditions throughout Madagascar. Diagnosis: Shell bulimiform, whorls relatively elongate, body whorl comprising approx. 66% of total shell height; spire profile cyrtoconoid; columella reflected, umbilicus narrow; sculptured by microscopic axial riblets and even finer spiral threads; lustreless, mauve-brown, paler apically. Description: Shell: Elongate-bulimiform, thin; body whorl comprising approx. 66 % of total shell height; spire profile cyrtoconoid, suture not strongly indented; whorls weakly convex, base a little more strongly so, periphery rounded; umbilicus reduced to a narrow tube-like channel by reflected upper portion of columella lip. Protoconch of approx. 1¼ whorls, smooth. Teleoconch of a further 4¾–5 whorls; appearing smooth, but microsculptured by numerous, very fine, close-set axial riblets, and even finer microscopic spiral threads; axial riblets becoming less regular with growth and resembling fine, uneven growthlines on last adult whorl, spiral sculpture persisting throughout and extending on to base. Aperture elongate-ovate; somewhat oblique to vertical axis of shell; peristome incomplete, simple and thin; no subterminal thickening evident inside outer lip; upper part of columella reflected and compressed against preceding whorl such that its edge is narrow (pleat-like in some specimens) and the umbilicus restricted to a very narrow, tube-like channel. Shell somewhat lustreless rather than glossy; predominantly mauve-brown in the freshest specimens, with some axial variations in intensity particularly on middle spire whorls; paler pinkish brown to fawn apically. Dimensions: Holotype, height 16.9 mm, max. diameter 8.5 mm; largest specimen, height 17.5 mm. Holotype: MADAGASCAR: Central W Madagascar, ca 60 km E of Maintirano, E of Belitsaka, E part of Tsingy Beanka, 18.06145°S 44.52595°E, ca 450 m, in leaf-litter and tsingy slots in comparatively lush tall dry deciduous/evergreen forest on south-facing hill, 2.x.2006, O. Griffiths, R. Randalana, D. Herbert & L. Davis, st’n 12/06 (AMS C.469591). Paratypes: St’n R 02/10 (NMSA L8469 /T2897, 1 specimen; AMS C.469584, 4 specimens; MNHN IM-2010-20069, 1 specimen). Additional locality data: Tsingy Beanka: st’ns 03/10, 11/10. Distribution: Evidently a narrow-range endemic; known only from the Tsingy Beanka. Habitat: Fresh dead shells have been found in tall, relatively lush dry deciduous and evergreen forest. No living specimens known. Remarks:The only comparable species known from Madagascar is C. rufoniger (Reeve, 1849), but that species differs in having more rounded whorls, a less elongate shape and a darker, chestnut brown colour (Fig. 7D, E). It also lacks spiral sculpture, and has a wider umbilicus and a thickened white varix inside the outer lip at maturity. C. rufoniger has been mostly recorded from north-eastern Madagascar (Fischer-Piette et al. 1994), but we can also confirm its presence at Antsingimavo (st’ns 04/06, 06/06), Tsingy Beanka (st’ns 01/09, 02/09, 09/09) and in the Tsingy de Bemaraha (Manombolo River). In the absence of anatomical data, our referral of this species to Conulinus is tentative. In its shape and spiral microsculpture, C. randalanai also resembles some species of Rachis Albers, 1850, but it lacks the colour pattern of dark spots and/or spiral bands commonly seen in species of that genus. Indeed, the referral of C. rufoniger to Conulinus also requires confirmation.Published as part of Griffiths, O. L. & Herbert, D. G., 2013, New species of land snails (Mollusca: Gastropoda) from two isolated karst formations in central western Madagascar: Tsingy Beanka and Antsingimavo, with additional notes on other regional endemics, pp. 1-48 in African Invertebrates 54 (1) on pages 15-16, DOI: 10.5733/afin.054.0101, http://zenodo.org/record/767010
Ampelita lindae Griffiths & Herbert 2013, sp. n.
Ampelita lindae sp. n. Fig. 14 Etymology: Named for Linda Davis, manager of the Mollusca collection at the KwaZuluNatal Museum and one of the members of the team that discovered this species. Diagnosis: Shell discoidal, spire flat or nearly so, periphery rounded; aperture strongly descendant with reflected rim; umbilicus wide; surface rough, sculptured by raised collabral vermiform granules; lustreless, mid-brown with whitish, flake-like markings and a pale peri-umbilical band. Description: Shell: Medium sized, relatively thin, discoidal with very low spire (H:D= 0.357 –0.485); periphery at or just above mid-whorl, rounded or weakly angled; a very weak supraperipheral gutter evident in occasional individuals, particularly near start of last whorl; suture indented, final part of last adult whorl descending steeply prior to aperture; umbilicus wide, funnel-shaped. Protoconch of ca 1¼–1½ whorls, the first smooth, thereafter with numerous, irregular, axially elongate granules; junction with teleoconch ill-defined. Teleoconch of a further 2½ whorls; with irregular growth-lines and an uneven sculpture of raised vermiform granules, in a primarily collabral alignment (Fig. 14D); surface thus rendered rough to the touch; granules not simply periostracal, but present on underlying shell; this sculpture continues onto base and into umbilicus. Aperture elongate-ovate, strongly oblique to vertical axis of shell; peristome incomplete, interrupted in parietal region; rim of peristome reflected forming a flaring lip. Shell lustreless, covered with a predominantly mid-brown periostracum when fresh, with irregular, pale, flake-like markings; underlying shell mostly pale with darker brownish spiral bands either side of a pale, peri-umbilical band; sometimes also darker behind flared aperture lip. Aperture lip white, interior greyish brown in fresh material. Dimensions: Holotype, max. diameter 30.5 mm, height 12.6 mm; largest specimen, max. diameter 31.4 mm, height 12.7 mm. Holotype: MADAGASCAR: Central W Madagascar, ca 10 km NE of Belitsaka and ca 60 km E of Maintirano, E side of Tsingy Beanka, in leaf-litter and amongst limestone boulders in tall moist east-facing forest growing on limestone, above Bokarano River Cave, 17.90568°S 44.48822°E, ca 230 m, 29.x.2009, O. Griffiths, D. Herbert, L. Davis & R. Randalana, st’n 07/09 (AMS C.474167). Paratypes: Same data as holotype (NMSA L8468 /T2903, 1 adult specimen); st’n 07/10 (AMS C.469580, 3 adult specimens); st’n 09/10 (AMS C.469579, 1 adult specimen); st’n 07/10 (TMAM T163, 1 adult specimen). Distribution: Evidently a narrow-range endemic, currently known only from Tsingy Beanka; not yet known from either Tsingy de Bemaraha or Antsingimavo. Habitat: Known only from fresh dead shells collected in leaf-litter in tall, east-facing, evergreen forest in the central part of Tsingy Beanka. Remarks: With its relatively small, very depressed shell and rough, vermiform microsculpture, A. lindae is a distinctive species. A. granulosa (Deshayes, 1840) (from the north-eastern tip of Madagascar), another species with coarse microsculpture, is much larger and has distinct periostracal bristles arising from the granules, a feature not evident in the present species. Additional material resembling A. lindae has been found as subfossils in the Kasijy Forest (Kelifely Plateau). These are larger (max. diameter 32.9–35.0 mm, height 15.3– 17.9 mm) than the present material but are clearly morphologically close to it. The material available, however, is inadequate to permit thorough study and meaningful comparison.Published as part of Griffiths, O. L. & Herbert, D. G., 2013, New species of land snails (Mollusca: Gastropoda) from two isolated karst formations in central western Madagascar: Tsingy Beanka and Antsingimavo, with additional notes on other regional endemics, pp. 1-48 in African Invertebrates 54 (1) on pages 21-22, DOI: 10.5733/afin.054.0101, http://zenodo.org/record/767010
A Systematic Review of Online Sex Addiction and Clinical Treatments Using CONSORT Evaluation
Researchers have suggested that the advances of the Internet over the past two decades have gradually eliminated traditional offline methods of obtaining sexual material. Additionally, research on cybersex and/or online sex addictions has increased alongside the development of online technology. The present study extended the findings from Griffiths’ (2012) systematic empirical review of online sex addiction by additionally investigating empirical studies that implemented and/or documented clinical treatments for online sex addiction in adults. A total of nine studies were identified and then each underwent a CONSORT evaluation. The main findings of the present review provide some evidence to suggest that some treatments (both psychological and/or pharmacological) provide positive outcomes among those experiencing difficulties with online sex addiction. Similar to Griffiths’ original review, this study recommends that further research is warranted to establish the efficacy of empirically driven treatments for online sex addiction
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